Markets Crash as Oil Soars 25%, Nifty Plunges 582 Points at Open

Indian equity markets opened with a severe sell-off, with the Nifty 50 and Sensex plunging over 2.3% each. The crash was triggered by a massive 25% surge in crude oil prices to $116 per barrel, raising major concerns about inflation and economic growth. Market experts warn of imminent hikes in retail fuel prices and significant pressure on sectors like aviation, autos, paints, and chemicals. The sell-off was mirrored across Asian markets, with Japan's Nikkei and South Korea's KOSPI both falling over 7%.

Key Points: Nifty Crashes 582 Pts, Sensex Down 1862 as Oil Prices Spike

  • Nifty crashes 2.38%
  • Crude oil spikes 25% to $116/barrel
  • Fears over inflation and economic growth
  • Heavy selling across all Asian markets
  • Sectors like paints, aviation, autos to face pressure
3 min read

Markets bleed as crude spikes, Nifty drops 582 pts, Sensex falls 1862 pts at open

Indian markets open in deep red as crude oil surges to $116/barrel, triggering heavy selling. Experts warn of inflation, fuel price hikes, and sectoral pressure.

"The oil price hit to the Indian GDP, Current account deficit and inflation will be huge. - Ajay Bagga"

Mumbai, March 9

The share markets in the country opened with a bloodbath on Monday as both benchmark indices declined sharply in the opening session amid a huge surge in crude oil prices and heavy selling across global markets.

The Nifty 50 index opened at 23,868.05 with a decline of -582.40 points or (-2.38 per cent), while the BSE Sensex opened at 77,056.75 with a decline of -1862.15 or -2.36 per cent, reflecting strong selling pressure across sectors.

The sharp fall in domestic equities comes as crude oil prices surged approximately 25 per cent on Monday to USD 116 per barrel amid the ongoing conflict in Asia, which has raised concerns over inflation and economic growth.

Market experts said the rise in crude prices could significantly impact the Indian economy, given the country's high dependence on imported oil.

Ajay Bagga, Banking and Market Expert, told ANI, "Indian markets are seeing a huge cut in the stock futures represented by the Gift Nifty. The oil price hit to the Indian GDP, Current account deficit and inflation will be huge given that India meets more than 85 per cent of its crude oil requirements from imports."

He added that the surge in oil prices is likely to result in higher fuel prices domestically.

"We expect retail petrol and diesel price hikes. Cooking gas price was already hiked last week for both consumers and commercial users. Jet aviation fuel prices will also go up," Bagga said.

According to him, several sectors will face pressure due to rising oil prices.

"Sectors like paints, aviation, autos, tyres, chemicals and all downstream industries using oil derivatives will see further cuts. However given the liquidity squeeze today, anything that can be sold will be sold, so expect cuts in leading counters, even those not correlated to the oil price, including in gold and silver," he added.

Sectorally, heavy selling was witnessed across several indices on the NSE. PSU Bank, Media and Financial Services stocks saw the highest selling pressure. The Nifty Auto index fell by 2.9 per cent, while Nifty Media declined by 2.36 per cent. PSU Bank index dropped 4 per cent, Nifty IT fell by 1.29 per cent, Nifty FMCG declined by 1.38 per cent, and Consumer Durables index lost 2 per cent.

Sunil Gurjar, SEBI-registered analyst and Founder of Alphamojo Financial Services, said "The Nifty 50 had a weak week. The index also breached the important 200-EMA, while a bearish EMA crossover indicates weakness in the trend. The fall was mainly driven by heavy FII selling, a weakening rupee, and ongoing global war tensions, which hurt market sentiment," he said.

He added that a sustained breakout above 24,646 could signal bullish momentum, while a breakdown below the current support zone may lead to further downside in the index. According to him, the second strong crucial support will be 23850.

The fall in Indian markets also comes amid sharp declines across other Asian markets. Japan's Nikkei 225 index declined by 7 per cent to the 52010 level, while South Korea's KOSPI index tanked 7.43 per cent to the 5169 level.

Other Asian markets also witnessed declines during the opening trade. Singapore's Straits Times index lost 2.65 per cent to the 4720 level, Hong Kong's Hang Seng index fell more than 2.46 per cent to the 25095 level, and Taiwan's weighted index dropped 5.77 per cent to the 31767 level.

Meanwhile, US markets had already ended last week under pressure. On Friday, the S&P 500 declined by 1.33 per cent to the 6740 level, while the Nasdaq also fell by 1.53 per cent to the 22400 level.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Just when we thought inflation was cooling down. 😓 My monthly budget is going to be a mess. Cooking gas price hike last week, now this. Feeling the pinch of being an import-dependent economy.
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Sarah B
Watching from the US, but have investments in Indian markets. The global contagion is real. When Asia bleeds, everyone feels it. Hope the support levels hold for Nifty.
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Rohit P
Time to be cautious but not panic. Markets go through these cycles. This is a good reminder for retail investors like me to diversify and not put all eggs in one basket. Maybe look at sectors less dependent on oil.
K
Karthik V
The FII selling is a major concern. It shows a lack of confidence in emerging markets during global uncertainty. While the article is informative, I wish it had more analysis on what the RBI can do to manage the rupee and inflation in this scenario.
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Michael C
The interconnectedness is staggering. A conflict in one region sends shockwaves from Tokyo to Mumbai to New York. Highlights the urgent need for stable global diplomacy, not just for peace but for economic security.

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